CAT Art
67CAT ART
This page is devoted to "Cat Art". Art depicting Cats. Of course the reason why there are so many pictures of cat's is because they're the "purrfect" subject.
CAT ART GALLERY
Cat ART GALLRY ~ Artist Bio
Theophile Alexandre Steinlen
Swiss artist Theophile Alexandre Steinlen (1859 – 1923) created warm, intimate posters of cabarets and music hall performers. Initially printing textiles, Steinlen moved to Paris’ Bohemian Montmartre section, where his Art Nouveau style blossomed in the avant-garde atmosphere. While living there he created numerous ads as well as hundreds of magazine illustrations and distinctive nightclub posters featuring his trademark cats. In addition to the posters, he is also known for his depictions of everyday working class Parisian scenes which display a deep sensitivity for his subjects.
CAT ART GALLERY
Cat ART GALLRY ~ Artist Bio
Helga Sermat
Canadian artist Helga Sermat’s childhood was full of her parents’ Estonian culture before she earned a fine arts degree and pursued additional training in theater design, drawing and printmaking from some of Canada’s most highly esteemed schools. Her work experience is as colorful as her artwork and includes time as a dairy hand, jingle vocalist, and square dance musician. She was a co-founder of an alternative art materials store and now works in illustration, art and web design.
CAT ART GALLERY
Cat ART GALLRY ~ Artist Bio
Marilyn Robertson
For as long as she can remember, Marilyn Robertson has been creating art. As a child, she recalls that, "Dolls and toys were much less important to me than paints, crayons, scissors and glue." As an adult, Marilyn's passion for creativity first led her to become an art teacher. After the birth of her daughter, she left her profession to focus her varied talents and interests toward designing and publishing greeting cards, graphics and textiles. Marilyn's artistic influences are as varied as her abilities. She names the rich colors and dream-like qualities of Pre-Raphaelite painters such as Rossetti and Burne-Jones as being important to her work. Other influences include the nature-inspired works of the Art Nouveau period, the Impressionists and the free-flowing graphic style of Aubrey Beardsley. Today, in her studio in Nottingham, England, Marilyn loves to paint "the fabulous vibrant shapes and endless rich colors" of flowers and fruit. "They are a source of constant delight and inspiration."
She thanks her daughter for a gift of dry pastels that widened her world of artistic media. Having painted primarily with watercolors and acrylics, Marilyn believed pastels to be "muted and pale, and frankly, a bit insipid." Surprisingly, Marilyn discovered a strong affinity for her adult crayons. "Modern materials give a fantastically wide palette and scope. The imagination is the only limit to subject matter and treatment and that's virtually limitless," says Marilyn now. Marilyn's original works are exhibited and sold in galleries throughout the United Kingdom, and her greeting cards are published worldwide.







justmesuzanne Level 5 Commenter 3 years ago
Wow! These are great! Thanks! :)